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  • MAN: People didn't want to believe

  • that they could be healthy in the morning

  • and dead by nightfall.

  • They didn't want to believe that.

  • NARRATOR: It was the worst epidemic this country has ever known.

  • It killed more Americans

  • than all the wars this century, combined.

  • MAN: It was a phantom.

  • We didn't know where it was.

  • MAN: In a gradual, remorseless way

  • it kept moving closer and closer.

  • MAN: You never knew from day to day

  • who was going to be next on the death list.

  • WOMAN: There were so many people dying that you ran out of things

  • that you'd never considered running out of before-- caskets.

  • NARRATOR: Before it was over, it almost broke America apart.

  • WOMAN: I remember my mother putting a white sheet,

  • a white piece of cloth over his face

  • and they closed the casket.

  • NARRATOR: In 1918, the United States was a vigorous young nation

  • leading the world into the modern age.

  • All our fears and anxieties were directed toward Europe,

  • where the war raged.

  • At home, we were safe.

  • William Maxwell was growing up in Lincoln, Illinois.

  • MAN: In 1918, Lincoln was a town of 12,000 people.

  • It was perhaps 50 years old,

  • just time enough for the trees to mature

  • so that the branches met over the sidewalks.

  • Yards were large.

  • The children played in clusters in the summer evenings.

  • On Sunday morning, the church bells were pretty to hear,

  • but my father had had enough of churchgoing

  • so we went fishing on Sunday,

  • out in the country with a picnic.

  • It was a life not very much impinged on

  • by the outside world.

  • (birds chirping)

  • NARRATOR: In Macon, Georgia, Cathryn Guyler was five years old.

  • WOMAN: My father was a playmate, actually,

  • and when he'd take me out in his car

  • he would stop at a grocery store that he knew

  • and take me in

  • and the owner of the store, in his white uniform,

  • would say to his men...

  • (claps hands)

  • "Go out and shake the candy tree, boys."

  • I think I must have known that candy didn't grow on that tree,

  • but I wouldn't have given up the notion

  • because he was enjoying it, and I was enjoying it,

  • and everybody was enjoying it, you see.

  • NARRATOR: For a young newspaper woman in Denver, Katherine Anne Porter,

  • life was like a romantic novel.

  • PORTER (dramatized): I had a job on the Rocky Mountain News.

  • The city editor put me to covering theaters.

  • I met a boy, an army lieutenant.

  • We were much in love.

  • NARRATOR: The soldier was the darling of America.

  • Patriotism ran unrestrained

  • in a country newly entered in the Great War.

  • WOMAN: We would march up the streets

  • singing, "Tramp, tramp, tramp, the boys are marching.

  • "I spy Kaiser at the door.

  • "and we'll get a lemon pie and we'll squash him in his eye

  • and there won't be any Kaiser anymore."

  • GUYLER: It was a good world,

  • but it was an age of innocence;

  • we really didn't know what was ahead.

  • NARRATOR: Some say it began in the spring of 1918,

  • when soldiers at Fort Riley, Kansas, burned tons of manure.

  • A gale kicked up.

  • A choking dust storm swept out over the land--

  • a stinging, stinking yellow haze.

  • The sun went dead black in Kansas.

  • Two days later, on March 11, 1918,

  • an army private reported to the camp hospital before breakfast.

  • He had a fever, sore throat, headache -- nothing serious.

  • One minute later, another soldier showed up.

  • By noon, the hospital had over a hundred cases.

  • In a week, 500.

  • That spring, 48 soldiers, all in the prime of life,

  • died at Fort Riley.

  • The cause of death was listed as pneumonia.

  • The sickness then seemed to disappear,

  • leaving as quickly as it had come.

  • For over a century, the booming science of medicine

  • had gone from one triumph to another.

  • Researchers had developed vaccines for many diseases:

  • smallpox, anthrax, rabies, diphtheria, meningitis.

  • WOMAN: With the great advances in microbiology,

  • we were eliminating mysteries, okay?

  • The mystery of what causes this disease,

  • the mystery of what causes this disease.

  • The optimism of being able to visualize something --

  • all we have to do is just look under the microscope

  • and we'll see the organism and then take an action

  • and see that something die off or be controlled.

  • That leads to the thought of invincibility.

  • NARRATOR: It seemed that the masters of medicine

  • could control life and death.

  • There was nothing that Americans couldn't do.

  • We could even win the war that no one could win.

  • That summer and fall,

  • over one-and-a-half million Americans crossed the Atlantic for war,

  • but some of those doughboys came from Kansas

  • and they'd brought something with them--

  • a tiny, silent companion.

  • Almost immediately, the Kansas sickness resurfaced in Europe.

  • American soldiers got sick...

  • English soldiers, French, German.

  • As it spread, the microbe mutated,

  • day by day becoming more and more deadly.

  • By the time the silent traveler came back to America,

  • it had become a relentless killer.

  • On a rainy day in September, Dr. Victor Vaughan,

  • acting surgeon general of the army, received urgent orders.

  • Proceed to a base near Boston called Camp Devens.

  • Devens was about to change Dr. Vaughan's world forever.

  • VAUGHAN (dramatized): I saw hundreds of young, stalwart men in uniform

  • coming into the wards of the hospital.

  • Every bed was full, yet others crowded in.

  • The faces wore a bluish cast.

  • A cough brought up the blood-stained sputum.

  • NARRATOR: On the day that Vaughan arrived, 63 men died at Camp Devens.

  • An autopsy revealed lungs that were swollen, filled with fluid,

  • and strangely blue.

  • Doctors were stunned.

  • What in the name of God was happening to these lungs?

  • When the strange new disease was finally identified,

  • it turned out to be a very old and familiar one:

  • influenza -- the flu.

  • But it was unlike any flu that anyone had ever seen.

  • MAN: One of the factors that made this so particularly frightening

  • was that everybody had a preconception

  • of what the flu was,

  • it's a miserable cold, and after a few days

  • you're up and around.

  • This was a flu that put people into bed

  • as if they'd been hit with a two-by-four

  • that turned into pneumonia,

  • that turned people blue and black and killed them.

  • It was a flu out of some sort of a horror story.

  • They never had dreamed that influenza

  • could ever do anything like this to people before.

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